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Chosen no: R-919 , from: 1887 Year. |
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TELESCOPIC AND MICROSCOPIC VISION
The human eye is beautifully adapted
to human needs and human enjoyment,
yet only when aided by the telescope and
the microscope, do we discover those
wonders of nature which hold us in mute
astonishment. The naked eye gathers
in much of the glory that surrounds us,
but unaided it cannot explore the seeming
secrets of nature.
Assisted by the telescope men view the
distant heavenly bodies, and study their
order of arrangement, magnitudes, distances,
motions, periods of revolution,
eclipses, etc., and the causes of their
various phenomena; and aided by the
microscope we are enabled to study forms
of earthly life and agencies of power invisible
because of their minuteness. Thus
telescopic and microscopic vision together
display the glory of God's work. But
suppose the eye were so formed as to have
naturally both the telescopic and microscopic
vision; would it be to human advantage?
No, the vision of immensity,
were it continually spread before us,
would be wearisome to eye and brain,
and leave no field for investigation and the
joy of finding something new; and the constant
vision of infinitesimal matter and life
would mar almost every thing of beauty.
As the natural eye is aided by the telescope
and the microscope, to behold the
wonders of the material universe, so we
find the Word of God furnishing both
the telescope and the microscope of divine
truth. By the aid of the divine telescope
we have been enabled to view God's plan
as a whole, and to see that it contemplates
the highest perfection, glory, and
permanent establishment, of all things in
the heavens and in the earth. By its aid
we are enabled also to study the order of
God's plan, to estimate the relative magnitudes
of his various promises, to compute
the distances in time, to observe the
orderly motions in the various parts of
God's plan, to mark the periods of the
revolving ages and dispensations, and also
to discover the causes by which such
changes are brought about.
You who have learned to use it, adjust
your telescope again, that you may view
the wondrous plan of God, which is wide
as the material universe which he created,
and includes in its gracious provisions all
of his creatures both heavenly and earthly.
Viewing it as a whole, we have seen its
order to be, first creation; secondly, discipline
and development; thirdly perfection,
blessedness and eternal glory. We
first find that Jehovah's direct creation
began and ended in his Son, our Lord
and Saviour, the Alpha and the Omega,
the beginning and the ending, the first
and the last.--Rev. 22:13.
[R919 : page 2]
He was the first and only begotten, and
by him as Jehovah's agent, is all the
divine purpose to be accomplished (Rev. 1:8).
In the works of creation he was
Jehovah's active agent--"all things were
made by him and without him was not
anything made" (John 1:3). And now
we find him the agent in the development
and perfecting of all things. It was Jehovah's
power delegated to the Son, and it
was Jehovah's glorious plan which he delighted
to accomplish. All glory and
praise then to Jehovah's infinite wisdom
and power and boundless love displayed
in his marvelous plan, and honor and
praise to Jesus, who delighted to accomplish
his will, though it cost him humiliation
unto death--even the death of the
cross; and praise again to the Father who
hath therefore highly exalted him and
made him partaker of the divine nature and given him all power in heaven and in
earth--that henceforth all may honor the
Son even as they honor the Father also. [R920 : page 2] Let glory, honor and praise echo and re-echo
to the utmost bound of the vast created
universe, planned by Jehovah and
accomplished by his power through his
worthy, well beloved, and highly honored
Son, the beginning and the ending, the
first and the last, the Alpha and Omega of
his creation. The Father's delight is in the
Son, and the Father's glory is manifested
in him. Yet the glory of the Son never
has and never will eclipse the glory of the
Father. The Father has declared, "I am
Jehovah: that is my name; and mine
honor to another I give not." (Isa. 42:8.)
The Son never attempted to diminish the
Father's glory, but always to add to it,
saying, "My Father is greater than I,"
and it is my delight to do his will. (John 14:28,
Psa. 40:8, John 4:34.) The
glory of the wondrous plan, displayed in
creation, redemption, restitution, and
eternal perfection and glory of all things in
heaven and in earth, belongs chiefly and
primarily to Jehovah, and secondarily to
his Son, who has been the honored chief
instrument in its accomplishment.
Leaving our observations of his creative
work, we turn to view the great plan for
the discipline and development of his intelligent
creatures. We have seen that
all were created perfect, yet free to choose
good or evil, and that for wise and benevolent
purposes in God's economy, evil
has been permitted to run its dreadful
course in the human race and among
some of the angels. We see also that the
great plan for human redemption and restoration,
is so far reaching in its results
as to finally settle the great controversy
between good and evil for all time and
for all creatures. Evil is now permitted to exist and flourish for purposes of discipline
and development, and when this is
accomplished, it shall be forever banished,
never again to mar the face of
God's finished work.
But again, leaving these observations,
turn your telescope to the still more distant
future. Dimly outlined because of
its greater distance, the glorious future of
eternal blessedness bursts upon our enraptured
vision, beginning at the close of the
Millennium with the great jubilee of jubilees,
the jubilee of the universe, when
Christ shall have put all enemies under
his feet (1 Cor. 15:25). There all tears
shall have been wiped away, and there
shall be no more death, neither sorrow
nor crying, neither shall there be any more
pain, for the former things will have passed
away. And God himself will be with them
and be their God.--Rev. 21:3,4.
Having taken these telescopic observations
of the outlines of God's great plan,
we note the order of its development, and
from the data furnished in the Scriptures,
and our observations of passing events,
we are enabled to compute the distance in
time, even to the final consummation--to
the great jubilee of jubilees. We have already
marked the completed revolution of
several great dispensational periods, and
now realize that we are in the ending of another
and just approaching the dawn of
the Day of Christ, whose blessed reign
shall wipe out the last vestige of evil and
usher in the universal jubilee.
As we study these great revolutions in
their minor details, we discover the principles
and causes of their movements. We
see that the first dispensation, under the
ministration of angels, completed its revolution
at the time of the flood, proving
the inability of angelic power to rescue
man (Heb. 2:2,5); we see the law dispensation
closing at the first advent of
Christ, proving the inability of man to
save himself by obedience to the law; now
we see also the gospel dispensation ending,
completing the selection of God's
anointed priest, who alone can accomplish
the great work. At the same time we see
the reign of evil completing its course.
In all these great and the many minor
movements of the various agencies of God's
plan which have been brought to our attention,
we see the one central and unchangeable
purpose of God--the final,
permanent establishment of righteousness,
peace and everlasting bliss on a basis
which recognizes the freedom of the individual
will, yet by the tender cord of love
links that will indissolubly to the divine
will as the only condition of everlasting
life and favor.
Seeing the grandeur of the work to be
accomplished through our Lord Jesus,
and the high honor bestowed upon him
by the Father, we are enabled to estimate,
to some extent, the exceeding great and
precious promises to the members of his
church--the "eternal weight of glory" to
be shared by his joint-heirs. And indeed
this is the chief object and value of
these glorious telescopic visions of the divine
purpose; and that we may be encouraged
to pursue the narrow way to its
end, we should take frequent observations.
Astronomers, as they study the material
universe, become completely absorbed in
it, and seem to live in an atmosphere and
to be filled with a joy above other men;
but how much more inspiring are the views
which we have been permitted to take,
and the wonderful truths and calculations
deduced from them? Here is a science
which towers above every other, and a philosophy
which, divinely directed, probes
the hitherto hidden things of God.
But, none can enter the watch-tower of
Zion, or use the divine telescope, who do
not come with meek and teachable spirit,
with consecrated hearts, and a student's
purpose to know the truth. To such the
Lord will blessedly disclose the riches of
his grace.
But what of the microscope? Thus far
we have only been glancing briefly at the
telescopic visions of God's Word; but
what, in comparison, we may term the
microscopic views, also wondrously declare
the glory of God. They declare his
glory most emphatically to the natural
man, for they are such as the natural man
can more readily grasp and accept.
These relate to the natural man, and his
restoration to human perfection. The
telescopic views are chiefly for those who
are "new creatures" and heirs together
with Christ. We turn the telescope
heavenward, the microscope earthward;
and the latter discloses the promises of
restitution. Close examination shows the
blessedness of that restored estate--perfect
human nature--and the necessary
discipline to lead the race to it; the judgments
of God in the punishments of the
wicked for their correction, and rewarding
the righteous; and the doom pronounced
against present evil systems, ecclesiastical,
civil and social, which, defying
the power of the Almighty, bind and
oppress mankind.
These microscopic views disclose to the
vision of faith a physical earth that shall
be man's Paradise restored--"The wilderness
and the solitary place shall be glad
...and the desert shall rejoice and blossom
as the rose. It shall blossom abundantly
and rejoice even with joy and
singing. The glory of Lebanon shall be
given unto it, the excellency of Carmel
and Sharon....And the parched
ground shall become a pool, and the
thirsty land springs of water." They
point us to the fact that all obstacles shall
be removed from the way to holiness--
"No lion shall be there, nor any ravenous
beast shall go up thereon; it shall not be
found there, but the redeemed shall walk
there." They show that all eyes and
ears shall be opened to receive the truth,
to be instructed in the right ways of the
Lord--"Then the eyes of the blind shall
be opened, and the ears of the deaf shall
be unstopped. Then shall the lame leap
as a hart, and the tongue of the dumb
sing." They tell of the joyful progress of
mankind toward perfection under that
wise and beneficent reign of Christ--"And
the ransomed of the Lord shall return and
come to Zion with songs and everlasting
joy upon their heads; they shall obtain
joy and gladness, and sorrow and sighing
shall flee away."--Isa. 35.
Thus these microscopic views reveal the
blessed transformation which not only
awaits mankind, but which also awaits the
earth, which was "made to be inhabited."
"And still new beauties do we see,
And still increasing light."
Let every child of God search out these
treasures of divine truth, long buried by
divine wisdom, for our present comfort
and joy, and proclaim to the world the
blessed assurance that its paradise is to be
restored, and that the great Restorer is
soon to begin the glorious work.
Truth on every subject has always met
with opposition. Science and philosophy
have had to contend for every inch of
footing gained. The use of the telescope
and microscope were once condemned as
improper prying into God's secrets. And
none the less is the searching of the Scriptures,
thus making use of the Divinely-given
telescope and microscope, opposed
to-day on the very same ground--an improper
prying into the mysteries of God.
Blinded indeed is that child of God who
cannot discern such sophistry, and the
dark source from whence such suggestions
come. Does our Father give us a revelation
of his will and purposes, and forbid
our study of it? Let us search and see,
and be filled with the spirit and inspiration
of these blessed truths; so shall we
be enabled to run joyfully and with patience
the race set before us.
MRS. C. T. R.
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